1a The Pituitary Gland Flashcards
What is a hormone?
a signalling molecule produced by glands that are transported in the bloodstream to target distant organs
What are peptide hormones synthesized as?
Prohormones
How are steroid hormones synthesized?
In a series of reactions from cholesterol
What is meant by constitutive secretion?
Released as soon as they are produced
Which type of hormone shows constitutive secretion?
Steroid hormones
Which hormones is secreted by regulatory secretion?
Peptide hormones
What is regulatory secretion?
When the hormones is stored in a vesicle and has to be triggered to be released
What is the difference in peptide and steroid hormones in terms of receptors?
Peptide hormones bind receptors on cell membranes and induce a signal via a secondary messenger system
Steroid hormones bind to intracellular receptors to change gene expression directly
What has to hapen to peptide hormones in order for them to be activated?
The pro hormone which is initially secreted has to be cleaved
What is the name of the bone which the pituitary gland sits in?
Sella tursica of sphenoid bone
What is the name of the posterior pituitary?
Pars nervosa
What are the three parts of the anterior pituitary?
Pars tuberalis
Pars intermedia
Pars distalis
What is directly above the pituitary?
The hypothalamus
What is the median eminence?
part of the posterior pituitary which has a blood supply in common with the anterior pituitary
What vascularises the anterior pituitary?
The hypothalamic-pituitary portal system
What regulates anterior pituitary function?
Hypothalamic Parvocellular neurones
Where do hypothalamic parvocellular neurones terminate?
The medial eminence
What length are hypothalamic parvocellular neurones?
Short
What do the hypothalamic parvocellular neurones release and into where?
Release hypothalamic releasing / inhibiting hormones into the capillary plexus of median eminence
what is special about the capillary plexus in the medial eminence?
They are leaky meaning so the hormone factors can enter into the hypothalamic-pituitary portal system
What is the name of the anterior pituitary?
Adenohypophysis
What is the adenohypophysis derived from?
The Rathke Pouch
What are the 5 types of endocrine cells found in the anterior pituitary?
Somatotrophs
Gonadotrophs
Corticotrophs
Lactotrophs
Thyrotrophs
Describe the hypothalamo-pituitary portal system
- Hypothalamic neurosecretory cells terminate at the medial eminence
- Release hypothalamic releasing / inhibiting factors into the capillary plexus
- The capillary plexus of median eminence is leaky, meaning these factors are able to enter into the portal circulation to the anterior pituitary
- These releasing or inhibiting hormones stimulate the release of hormones from anterior pituitary cells
- The hormones leave the gland via the blood
What do somatotrophs secrete?
Growth hormone (somatotrophin)
What do gonadotrophs secrete?
LH and FSH
What do lactotrophs release?
Prolactin
What do thyrotrophs secrete?
Thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH)
What do corticotrophs release?
Adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH)
Describe how the production of the thyroid hormone is regulated?
- The hypothalamic neurosecretory cells release thyrotrophin releasing hormone into the portal circulation
- TRH travels to anterior pituitary via portal system
- The TRH acts on the thyrotrophs
- The thyrotrophs then release thyroid stimulating hormone to stimulate the thyroid to produce thyroxine
What is secreted from the hypothalamic neurosecretory cells to stimulate the thyrotrophs?
Thyrotrophin releasing hormone
What is secreted from the hypothalamic neurosecretory cells to stimulate the somatotrophs?
growth hormone releasing hormone
What is secreted from the hypothalamic neurosecretory cells to inhibit the somatotrophs?
Somatostatin
What is secreted from the hypothalamic neurosecretory cells to stimulate the gonadotrophs??
Gonadotrophin releasing hormone
What is secreted from the hypothalamic neurosecretory cells to inhibit the lactotrophs?
Dopamine
What is secreted from the hypothalamic neurosecretory cells to stimulate the corticotrophs?
Corticotrophin releasing hormone
What causes a bilateral hemianopia?
Compressing of the optic chiasm due to a pituitary tumour
What crosses at the optic chiasm?
Optic fibres from the nasal retinae
Why do a bilateral hemianopia cause blindness in the right and left temporal visual fields?
Light landing on the nasal retina arrives from the peripheral vision, and since the fibres from the nasal retinae cross at the optic chiasm, a tumour will prevent transmission of sensory information from temporal visual fields
What is the main target of growth hormone?
General body tissues, particularly the liver
What is the main target for prolactin?
Breasts - lactating women
What is the main target for thyroid stimulating hormone?
The thyroid
What is the main target of the adrenocorticotrophic hormone?
The adrenal cortex
What is the origin of the adenohypophysis?
Epithelial origin
What is the origin of the neurohypophysis?
Appendage of the hypothalamus (neural)
Which two hormones does the posterior pituitary gland store?
Oxytocin and Arginine Vasopressin (AVP or anti-diuretic hormone)
Where are oxytocin and Arginine Vasopressin made?
Made in the hypothalamus
What is the name given to neurones which are excited and release AVP or oxytocin into the posterior pituitary
Magnocellular neurones
What happens to the AVP and oxytocin in the posterior pituitary?
They diffuse into the blood capillaries
What does Arginine Vasopressin do?
Stimulates the reabsorption of water into the blood to make the urine more concentrated
Describe how Arginine Vasopressin affects the concentration of urine?
- AVP binds to V2 receptor
- This triggers an intracellular protein cascade resulting in Aquaporin proteins being inserted into the apical membrane of the kidney tubule
- This means water molecules can be transported from the apical membrane into the blood stream
- This makes the urine more concentrated
Which part of the pituitary is involved in the formation of milk?
The anterior pituitary
Which part of the pituitary is involved in the ejection of milk from lactating breasts?
The posterior pituitary
Describe how milk is produced in breasts?
- Baby sucks on nipple
- Mechanical stimulation of nipple and surrounding are activates afferent pathways
- Signals integrated in the hypothalamus and inhibit dopamine release
- Less dopamine in the portal means more prolactin is released due to less inhibition of the lacrotrophs
- Therefore prolactin concentration in blood increases, causing milk to be secreted from the mamillary glands
Describe how milk is ejected from the nipple?
- Afferent pathways activated due to baby sucking on the nipple
- Oxytocin releasing neurone activity is increased
- More oxytocin released into blood stream
- Increased oxytocin increases milk ejection in mammary glands
What is the name of the growth hormone?
Somatotrophin
Is somatotrophin a peptide or steroid hormone?
peptide hormone
What are the two ways that somatotrophin released from the pituitary works?
Directly to body tissues and indirectly on the liver
How does GH indirectly affect growth
GH stimulates the production of Insulin Growth Factor 1 (IGF1) which has its own receptors in tissues and influences growth
What is it called when you have too much growth hormone?
Acromegaly
What condition arises when you have acromegaly before puberty ends?
Gigantism
Why is there no more height growth due to acromegaly after puberty?
The growth plates have fused
What are some symptoms of acromegaly?
Macroglossia - Larger tongue
Prominent nose
Sweatiness
Headache
Increased hand and feet size
Why might patients with acromegaly have tingling in their fingers?
Due to carpal tunnel syndrome
How do you think you could treat a patient with acromegaly?
Medical treatment: Somatostatin Anaologues to suppress growth hormone release, Antagonist of growth Hormone receptors so GH cannot bind to receptor eg Pegvisomont
Radiotherapy - beam of radio frequency into pituitary - not normally first line of treatment as you can damage other aspect of the pituitary
Surgery to remove tumour, through the nose to remove tumour, if fails then second attempt at surgery through sphenoid bone
What is carpal tunnel syndrome?
When there is pressure on the median nerve in the wrist, which causes paraesthesia
What are two types of hypothalamic neurosecretory cells?
Hypothalamic parvocellular cells and hypothalamus magnocellular cells
What is the name of no 1?
optic chiasm.
What is the name of no 2?
pars tuberalis.
What is the name of no 3?
pars intermedia
What is the name of no 4?
pars distalis
What is the name of no 5?
sella tursica of sphenoid bone
What is the name of no 6?
hypothalmus
What is the name of no 7?
mamilliary body
What is the name of no 8?
median eminence
What is the name of no 9?
infundibulum
What is the name of no 10?
pars nervosa